HUNDREDS OF FIRE FIGHTERS RALLY TO CALL ON
MAYOR CICILLINE TO KEEP PROMISES AND SHOW COMMITMENT TO PUBLIC SAFETY
IAFF General President Harold
Schaitberger, Local 799 President Paul Doughty and fire fighters from across
New England stand together at City Hall to demand long-awaited contract for
Providence fire fighters
PROVIDENCE, RI – IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger,
Providence Local 799 President Paul Doughty, IAFF 3rd District Vice
President Michael Mullane, Rhode Island State Association of Fire Fighters
President Frank Montanaro and over 350 fire fighters from across New England
gathered at City Hall today to call on Mayor David Cicilline to keep his
promise of a new contract and show a renewed commitment to adequate public
safety for the people of Providence.
Providence fire fighters have been without a contract since
June 30, 2001, despite promises from Providence Mayor David Cicilline to
work with Local 799 to negotiate a fair agreement within 30 days of his
election.
“The fact is that the Providence fire fighters have proposed
a contract that would save the taxpayers of this city thousands of dollars
each year,” Schaitberger said to Local 799 members. “When you took your oath
to serve in this job that requires physical sacrifice, you said you would
not turn your backs on the people of Providence. And you have kept that
promise. And now it’s time for this Mayor to keep the city’s promise to
you.”
The City is also seeking to cut fire fighters from the
already under-staffed Providence Fire Department, which would further risk
fire fighter and public safety. Currently, the PFD runs only three fire
fighters per truck on about half its calls, which doesn’t meet national
staffing standards issued by the National Fire Protection Association.
“The cuts in the number of fire fighters the city is
attempting would cause the PFD to fall even further behind the rest of the
country, expose minority neighborhoods to additional risk, while moving
fully staffed companies to affluent neighborhoods,” remarked Schaitberger.
Providence makes 26,000 EMS runs out of 36,000 total calls
per year. One out of every 10 runs is responded to by mutual aid rescues,
with waits of up to 30 minutes for patients in critical, life-threatening
health emergencies. The rescues and engines in Providence are some of the
busiest in the country, with five contractual rescues all averaging 5,000
runs per year.
“Balancing the budget on the backs of public safety is a
dangerous game of Russian roulette,” noted Schaitberger. “There is no
management rhetoric that can explain away an injury to a fire fighter or the
death of a child because there were not enough fire fighters on the scene.”
The International Association of Fire Fighters,
headquartered in Washington, DC, represents more than 267,000 full-time
professional fire fighters and paramedics who protect 80 percent of the
nation’s population. More than 2,900 affiliates protect nearly 6,000
communities in Canada and in every state in the U.S. More information is
available at www.iaff.org .
Click here for
IAFF Press Release Archives